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Leicester space pioneers return to unveil new Space Research Centre

Since the first Skylark rockets in 1961, University of Leicester experts have flown more than 90 instruments in space

Professor Ken Pounds CBE (left) and Professor Alan Wells (centre) open the Space Research Centre at Space Park Leicester(Image: Jason Senior)

Two of Leicester’s first space scientists have returned to open the region’s state-of-the-art Space Research Centre.

Professor Ken Pounds CBE, founder of the University of Leicester’s Space Research Group in 1960, and Professor Alan Wells, founding director of the Space Research Centre, cut the ribbon on the new facility at Space Park Leicester.

The pair were joined by researchers and engineers working on the centre’s cutting-edge work, under the leadership of director, Professor Mark Sims.

The new facilities include a 3,200 sq ft clean room to build and test satellites and space instruments, plus workshops and laboratories incorporating AI, digital and advanced manufacturing technologies.

The university led the development of the £100 million Space Park Leicester which was recently officially opened by British astronaut Tim Peake.

Tenants include air quality monitoring specialist EarthSense, LENKÉ Space and Water Solutions which uses space data to look at water supplies in different parts of the world, and global mobile comms start-up AST SpaceMobile.

Prof Pounds, Emeritus Professor of Space Physics and the founder of space research in Leicester, gave a brief account of how space research came to Leicester 62 years ago, and how that evolved into the broad, international programme now based in the city.

He said: “The Space Age essentially began with the launch of Sputnik in 1957. At that time I was studying for a PhD in the Rocket Group at UCL, with the task of developing experiments to measure solar radiation – and it turned out Leicester had just the vacuum x-ray facilities I needed for essential pre-flight checks.